Thursday, April 2, 2026
It's All Sparkly Now
Tuesday, March 31, 2026
It's Still Only March
Well, it's the last day, anyway. April starts tomorrow.
It's still March today and with the sustained record breaking warmth there has been way too early growth. I haven't been outside at all -- it's hard to navigate on the knee scooter and I've only been out to the patio and to the driveway to maneuver into the car for appointments.
Sunday, March 29, 2026
Salvia Hardiness Confusion
> Consistently rated a zone 7 plant.
My favorite and I have 2 in the ground and four still in their nursery pots. I'll plant one and re-pot the other three in larger containers to keep by the deck.
> Rated zone 7 by High Country Gardens, which sells it, but it's rated zone 8 by other sources.
So far they have come back for me in these past two warm winters.
> Consistently rated solid zone 8, even by High Country Gardens, which sells it.
Last summer I bought three salvias at Lowe's labeled Salvia greggii but they were mislabeled. They are actually Hot Lips microphylla and it turns out not hardy here.
I tossed all three.
> This is a cold hardy one consistently rated for zone 5
> Hardy in zone 5, although some sources say zone 6
> Rated to zone 3.
Midnight Purple is tiny, compact.
Perfect Profusion hasn't done anything yet, I need to see it grow.
> Hardy, down to zone 4. I'm planning it for the circle garden.
Wednesday, March 25, 2026
Rosemary 'Arp'
What is the mature size of rosemary 'Arp"? Nursery sites selling 'Arp' are all over the place, some say 5 feet wide, some say 2 feet wide but 6 feet tall. Some say 3 feet tall and 4 feet wide. What is your best advice on the eventual size growing in Santa Fe conditions in gravel against a sunny stucco house wall? Here is a picture of mine in a too small space. What do you think? I know I need to move it but how big will it get?
> The response:
Great question—and your photo helps a lot.
Short answer:
In Santa Fe conditions (high desert, full sun, reflected heat from stucco, gravel mulch), rosemary ‘Arp’ will most realistically mature to about:
- 3–4 feet tall
- 3–5 feet wide
…but the width is what usually surprises people.
Why nursery sizes are all over the place
You’re seeing conflicting info because ‘Arp’ is:
- Climate-responsive
In milder, more humid climates it can stretch taller (even 5–6 ft). - Cold-hardy but compact in stress
In colder, drier climates like Santa Fe, winter dieback and low humidity keep it denser and broader rather than tall and lanky. - Strongly influenced by pruning
Light trimming = fuller, wider shrub.
What yours is telling us
Looking at your plant:
- It’s already vigorous and upright
- Growing in a heat-reflective microclimate (stucco wall + stone path)
- Has room to expand outward toward the path
👉 That combination typically produces a broad, mounding shrub that leans outward, not a narrow upright column.
What to expect in your exact spot
Given your setup:
- Warm wall = faster growth
- Gravel = excellent drainage (rosemary loves this)
- Sun exposure = maximum size potential
Realistic outcome:
- Height: ~3–4 ft (maybe a bit more in a mild winter cycle)
- Width: 4–5 ft, possibly wider than tall
And importantly:
It will likely encroach heavily onto that flagstone path within 1–2 growing seasons.
Do you need to move it?
Honestly—yes, and sooner is easier than later.
Right now it’s already:
- Too close to the wall for airflow
- Positioned where its natural shape will spill into the walkway
If you leave it:
- You’ll be forced into constant pruning (which it tolerates, but it ruins the natural form)
- The interior may get woody and sparse on the wall side
Better placement guidelines
If you relocate it, give it:
- At least 3 feet from walls
- 4–5 feet of lateral space
- Full sun (what you already have is perfect)
- Same gravelly drainage
If you don’t move it
You can manage it, but you’ll need to:
- Lightly shear 2–3 times a year (never cut into old woody stems)
- Keep it off the path early before it hardens outward
- Accept a somewhat flattened, one-sided shrub
Bottom line
Your plant is healthy and happy—and that’s exactly why it’s a problem in that spot.
👉 In Santa Fe, think “wide shrub first, tall second.”
👉 Plan for ~4 feet wide minimum, likely more than the space allows.
If you want, I can suggest a replacement plant for that exact narrow space (something with similar Southwest character but a tighter footprint).
Tuesday, March 24, 2026
The Hose Corner
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| The system |
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| Nice when smaller, lovely in bloom |
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| The chair + a pot -- uncluttered look |
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| This is A.I. but the general idea |
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| Also A.I. and a little stiff looking, but this is simple |
Sunday, March 22, 2026
Record Heat
Saturday, March 21, 2026
No Interference
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| Salvia greggii |
While you can’t be out there digging or pruning, this is a unique window to observe your garden’s architecture from a distance.
Gardens aren't just about the work we put into them; they are about the life that happens when we aren't interfering.
Gardens aren't just about the work we put into them; they are about the life that happens when we aren't interfering.




















